Coevolution of pathogens and cultural practices: a new look at behavioral heterogeneity in epidemics
From MaRDI portal
Publication:849553
DOI10.1006/tpbi.2002.1585zbMath1101.92314OpenAlexW1993094289WikidataQ45971070 ScholiaQ45971070MaRDI QIDQ849553
Mark M. Tanaka, Marcus W. Feldman, Jochen Kumm
Publication date: 31 October 2006
Published in: Theoretical Population Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1006/tpbi.2002.1585
Related Items (5)
Effects of asymptomatic infection on the dynamical interplay between behavior and disease transmission in multiplex networks ⋮ Cultural niche construction with application to fertility control: a model for education and social transmission of contraceptive use ⋮ A cultural evolutionary model of the interaction between parental beliefs and behaviors, with applications to vaccine hesitancy ⋮ Risk perception and effectiveness of uncoordinated behavioral responses in an emerging epidemic ⋮ Effect of human behavior on the evolution of viral strains during an epidemic
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- A competitive exclusion principle for pathogen virulence
- Endemic disease in environments with spatially heterogeneous host populations
- Spatial heterogeneity and the design of immunization programs
- Stability of the endemic equilibrium in epidemic models with subpopulations
- The spread and persistence of infectious diseases in structured populations
- Heterogeneity in disease-transmission modeling
- A deterministic model for gonorrhea in a nonhomogeneous population
- The evolution of continuous variation. II: Complex transmission and assortative mating
- An immunization model for a heterogeneous population
- Eradication of infectious diseases in heterogeneous populations
- Persistence of an infectious disease in a subdivided population
- The effects of population heterogeneity on disease invasion
- Assortment of encounters and evolution of cooperativeness
This page was built for publication: Coevolution of pathogens and cultural practices: a new look at behavioral heterogeneity in epidemics